Posted by Harry McCracken | Wednesday, February 3, 2010
The lead story, “Will Home Computing Survive?,” reports on the death throes of the 8-bit home computer business, as Commodore and Atari tried to price-cut each other out of the game. (Fittingly, the cover model was the general manager of Crazy Eddie’s, where prices were insaaaaaane.) There’s also a sidebar on Commodore’s plans for a next-generation computer based on a design from a company it had acquired: Amiga Corporation.
A story on “lap-size computers” is a reminder that the term “laptop” wasn’t pervasive yet; one on blazing 2400-baud modems says that home users won’t need that much speed.
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February 3rd, 2010 at 8:42 am
Cool. As I recall, Apple was actually more profitable after Steve Jobs left. It didn’t last long though. 🙂
February 3rd, 2010 at 5:43 pm
Love the sidebar on #9 – it says “Businesses can buy software electronically.” And that was news then!
February 4th, 2010 at 8:50 am
But the Google Books collection only seems to go back to late 1986. What about the 1981-1986 issues? Are they adding gradually? Or should I help them out with my back-issue collection?
June 29th, 2011 at 12:09 pm
I remember your writing Michael!
February 5th, 2010 at 3:35 pm
These were from the later period of Infoworld for me. When I first subscribed it was more of a tabloid style with a newspaper-style cover. Anybody could get a subscription for free if you said you were a business. Every issue was worth reading if for nothing else John Dvorak’s column. Before he was a podcast cramugin he was the go-to guy for tech scoops. Albeit, he pretty much had that field to himself back then.